This desktop-friendly zen garden is made up of these scaled down hand rakes and sand levelers

This collection of Kawaerakes and hand rakes are scaled down from their traditional size to fit desktop Zen gardens.

Desktop Zen gardens are like microcosms of life-sized Zen gardens. Downsized to fit on top of our computer desks, desktop Zen gardens are meant to offer users the meditative effect of raking sand. Sand levelers and hand rakes are traditional components of Zen gardens that allow you to create linear designs in the sand garden or level out the sand to start anew. Project Rotate, an LA-based design studio, recently launched a collection of desktop Zen garden hand rakes in collaboration with Yuki Kawae, a Zen garden sand artist, who designs their own line of hand rakes called Kawaerakes.

Designers: Project Rotate x Yuki Kawae

The collection between Project Rotate and Yuki Kawae features several different hand rakes, each capable of creating unique designs in the sand. A six-piece groove set consists of six handheld sand rakes that create wider sand designs. While the handle is made from natural wood, the rake is made from white trimming that takes on various shapes and patterns. The groove sets’s counterpart would be Project Rotate’s six-piece ridge set.

The ridge set’s geometric rake trimming differs from the groove set’s curved, rounded trimming, but both sets are wide by design and form a unique base pattern for desktop Zen gardens. Besides the handheld rakes, Yuki Kawae designed traditional hand rakes that come with a lengthier handle for more precise raking, lending to more intricate, detailed designs. Finally, a sand leveler provides the means for users to level out their sand, like a Zamboni on ice, and start anew.

Project Rotate describes on their website, “Designed with simplicity in mind, in the tradition of karesansui, these rakes are easy and intuitive to use. Our rake profiles will expand the possibilities for your patterns and add an extra dimension to your Zen garden. What you can create with them is up to you. Let your imagination go.”

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Afford Chair is one theft-proof chair perfect for public settings

Afford Chair Design

The Afford Chair isn’t exactly affordable because no price has been set yet. What it does is simply afford storage for your different belongings.

Chairs should offer more than just comfortable seating. Many people also believe chairs are an important element of an interior. They are used for decoration that’s why there are designer chairs that are expensive and most coveted. However, for the public setting, chairs should just be basic but who says you can’t use chairs that are smarter?

Designer: June Woo Lee

Afford Chair Design

A lot of areas in our lives have changed because of the pandemic. Going out can be slightly daunting because you know, the virus still lurks. You can’t go out without a facemask. You can’t really leave your things on any surface or on the floor. That is why a chair with storage can be an ideal solution, especially in restaurants, hotels, and schools.

Korean Designer June Woo Lee came up with the Afford Chair to address a number of issues concerning public chairs. His design includes a drawer for storage of your personal stuff. It offers safety because you no longer have to hang your bag from the chair. This will then lessen the chance of having your things stolen because they are kept safe underneath the chair.

The storage is easily accessible because it’s a pull-out drawer. You can’t just pull out the drawer from behind though. You need to pull the base of the seat first. This step adds safety because anyone can’t just pull the drawer from behind. There is a lock that secures the storage when a person sits on the chair.

Afford Chair Design

For coats and jackets, you can also hang them on the Afford Chair’s back, specifically, on the hook. Tuck the rest inside the drawer so your coat won’t touch the floor. Your backpack can still be placed there if you want. It’s still the pandemic and you don’t want your stuff getting dirty. Noise pollution is also reduced with this chair. When you need to move the chair, the sled base glides will work quietly.

Afford Chair Design

The Afford Chair offers the public users many things including comfort, protection, safety, and hygiene. It is also safe to use because of the design of the legs to prevent fallback. If you’re the type who can’t sit still and likes to play with chairs, this one won’t let you.

Afford Chair

The materials include plastic and steel so this means Afford will be easy to produce. The chair will also be easy to disinfect and clean. A simple wipe down of the surface with mild soap, detergent, or alcohol will be enough to sanitize the chair.

The chair is one basic furniture piece but we find it cool that a number of innovations can be applied. You see, that is the beauty of industrial design. A good design affords us to improve our lives no matter how mundane the task is.

Afford Chair Design

Afford Chair Design

Afford Chair Design

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This household greeting service uses AI to register resident’s arrival and welcome them

Dearbell is a smart household welcome service and lighting fixture that employs Artificial Intelligence to register the arrival of each resident and deliver corresponding messages.

It’s been said that with the arrival of each new generation, the more disconnected we become from one another, tightening our grip on our smartphones. It’s no secret that the more technologically advanced we become as a society, the more comfortable we become withdrawing from IRL socialization to prioritize our online lives.

Designers: Juan Lee, Hyebin Lee, Banhu Jeong, and Daeun Yoo

Responding to this generational gap, designers look once more to technology for a solution. Dearbell, a smart household welcome service, is one of the more recent solution-based concepts from a team of designers based in Korea.

Following a research period of interviews and surveys, the design team found that most family members living under one roof feel disconnected from one another. Due to long work hours and technology overload, communication at home is sometimes perceived as “nagging.” In an effort to connect family members together through communication, Dearbell is conceptualized as a customizable, home greeting service for family members to get to know one another better.

Dearbell takes on the look of a light pendant that can either hang from your ceiling or be mounted to your wall. Projecting from the light fixture, holographic messages are created and delivered by family members to other family members. Depending on artificial intelligence for operation, visual haptic sensors register each household resident’s gestures, shoes, and smartphone to ensure accurate message delivery.

The team of designers goes on to explain, “Dearbell projector is motivated from ‘welcoming bell’. Technically, it supports automotive focusing in multi-layers and AI projection mapping that shows the image on a certain object and recognizes gesture interaction.”

Walking through the home’s front door, residents take off their shoes and Dearbell alerts each individual family member of the total number of steps taken during the day as well as any messages left to be read. As the unread message is beamed from the light pendant, the message can be opened by its designated receiver once they put their hand over the message icon.

Once the message is read, the receiver can choose to leave a response in the form of emojis by shaking their fists, a Dearbell-detected hand gesture. In addition to curated messages, residents can ask Dearbell for some daily information as they prepare to leave the home, including, weather, public transportation, as well as a pre-made to-do list.

As residents arrive home, Dearbell projects their corresponding messages via light beam.

Wooden elements ground the stainless steel body with a touch of warmth and rustic charm.

Once home, Dearbell alerts residents of the steps taken throughout the day.

“Through the Wood detail finishing at the bottom, it visually reveals the warm communication with the family, not the technical image.”

“Dearbell consists of soft shapes and textures that are not solid form, luxurious arch-shaped metal frame.”

Dearbell can either be mounted to a vertical service or suspended from the ceiling. 

Following a period of interviews and surveys, the team of designers recognized the generational gaps present in most households. 

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An integrated storage unit transforms this lantern into a treasure box to store your keepsakes

Lightray is a light fixture with an integrated storage unit that was inspired by a treasure box.

Bedside appliances have a way of combining sentimentality with practicality. Most often used just before bed, our desklamps, charging stations, and stationery storage boxes generally keep simple operating mechanisms so our sleepy brains don’t have to put in too much effort. They also are usually pretty charming by design to make our bedroom spaces feel in alignment with our personality and the design styles we value most. Inspired by a treasure box, Kil Jeongyeon designed Lightray, a simple lantern-style light fixture with an integrated tray table to store sentimental momentos like photographs and jewelry.

Designer: Kil Jeongyeon

Meant to remind us of what we hold most dear to our hearts, Lightray merges the practicality of a light fixture with the nostalgia of a coffer. Built like a simple lantern, the wireless light fixture is defined by a ribbed glass encasement, which hosts the appliance’s light device. Inside, the light is warm like that emitted from 40W vintage-style lightbulbs and the ribbed glass helps subdue it further, making it an ideal night light for people of all ages. Jeongyeon designed Lightray so that, even when things might seem dark, our most cherished keepsakes will always remain bright.

Jeongyeon explains, “Lightray is a light that has a tray. It was designed inspired by a treasure box. Put something you like or something always with you. Even on a dark night when you can’t see anything, they shine brightly.” Even more than that, Lightray comes with rubber nonslip leg grips so our momentos will never fall out of place. A USB Type-C charging unit also allows for overnight charging so that Lightray can be a portable, wireless lantern when necessary.

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Link About It: This Week’s Picks

Research on the shapes of letters, funds for New York artists, a building constructed from waste and more in our look around the internet

New Program Provides Guaranteed Income For NYC Artists in Need

Open for applications until 25 March, Creatives Rebuild New York is a new initiative that will provide guaranteed income to NYC artists in need through two programs: one offering $1,000 a month for 18 months with no strings attached, and the other providing a two-year job with a community organization or municipality, paying $65,00 per year. 2,400 recipients will be chosen for the former program while 300 will be picked for the latter. To qualify, applicants need only be based in New York State, be an artist—which the program broadly defines as “someone who regularly engages in artistic or cultural practice”—and show proof of financial need. The application process will also include accommodations for non-English speakers or those with disabilities to be accessible to everyone, especially to those from overlooked communities. Learn more about this necessary program and how it considers the labor and importance of art at The New York Times.

Image courtesy of Nina Westervelt/The New York Times

Exoplanet Orbiting The Nearest Star To Our Solar System Discovered

An exoplanet (an Earth-like body that orbits a star that isn’t our Sun) has been discovered orbiting Proxima Centauri—the nearest star to our solar system. Found using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (ESO’s VLT) which is located in Chile, the exoplanet—called Proxima d—could be significant, as it orbits Proxima Centauri’s habitable zone, where “it’s not too warm nor too cold for liquid water to exist at the surface of a planet.” When searching for life on other planets, water is crucial. Additionally, Proxima d’s proximity to Earth means it could feasibly be the destination of a future mission. Lead researcher João Faria says, “The discovery shows that our closest stellar neighbor seems to be packed with interesting new worlds, within reach of further study and future exploration.” Read more at INVERSE.

Image courtesy of ESO/L. Calçada

New Research Rethinks the Design of Letters

For centuries, scholars believed that there was no inherent visual correlation between certain signifiers (letters and words) and the signified (what they conveyed). For example, this belief—helmed by Swiss linguist and philosopher Ferdinand de Saussure—suggests that there is no reason why the word tree corresponds to an actual tree, because there’s nothing particularly tree-like about the word tree. New research, however, is making scholars believe this long-held opinion could be false. The Color Game—an app developed by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History to study the evolution of language—features a number of symbols that players use to communicate with one another. The 4,000+ participants, spanning over 70 languages and 100 countries, were able to develop shared understanding as some symbols adopted meaning. A language began to form. Now, researchers are rethinking the design behind letters, believing that iconicity, the idea that words and letters relate to what they refer to, might be possible. Learn more about it at Vice.

Image courtesy of Catherine Falls/Getty Images

Yvette Mayorga’s Cake Decorations Critique Surveillance and Consumerism

Yvette Mayorga’s most recent work, “Surveillance Locket,” is a cake version of the Polly Pocket mansion that the artist dreamed of owning in her youth. Made with multiple layers of pink acrylic paint, pushed through piping bags, the faux confection melds the domestic interiors of the artist’s childhood with imaginary spaces. At first glance, the cake appears joyful and luxurious with its gold banisters and chandeliers, but a closer look reveals toy soldiers hiding throughout. These figures represent the military presence at the US and Mexico border, where Mayorga spent time between family visits growing up. Combing the gluttony of cake, children’s toys, soldiers and colonialist histories, Mayorga makes a critique about overconsumption and surveillance. Learn more about the work—which will be permanently installed at O’Hare International Airport’s Terminal 5—at It’s Nice That.

Image of Yvette Mayorga: Surveillance Locket, courtesy of the artist

Air Protein Makes Steaks By Recycling Carbon Dioxide

Agriculture makes up a quarter of our annual greenhouse gas emissions with meat production being responsible for the most in the industry. As the climate crisis worsens, populations rise and resources dwindle, researchers have been urgently searching for alternative, more sustainable proteins. Enter Air Protein, a California-based startup on a mission to transform carbon dioxide into meat. Founded in 2019 by former physicist Lisa Dyson and material scientist John Reed, Air Protein—like yogurt—relies on fermenting live microbes (hydrogenotrophic), which are then mixed with carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, minerals and water to create a protein-rich flour that has a similar amino acid profile as meat. With a carbon-negative production that uses 1.5 million times less land than beef and reduces water usage by 15,000 times, Air Protein is revolutionizing the future of meat consumption. Learn more about it at Wired.

Image courtesy of Sean Gladwell/Getty Images

A New Building in Manhattan is Made of 577,367 Pounds of Waste

At the corner of NYC’s 47th Street and 11th Avenue now sits The West, a new building made up of 219 residences and 577,367 pounds of recycled waste. From StoneCycling, the building’s bricks comprise 60% of byproducts from the construction industry—the first time this material has been used in the US. Not only are these bricks more sustainable than traditional ones, but they’re also design-forward. Each brick (hand-brushed with glass particles for subtle shine) is unique, varying in smoothness and hues—from pistachio to nougat and truffle. This incongruent nature speaks to the history of the neighborhood, Hell’s Kitchen. “This area has such a bumpy and rough history. It’s industrial, so we felt we wanted to create a connection to both a little bit of the past and the future,” says Erikjan Vermeulen, a partner of Concrete, the design company behind the building. Read more about The West at Fast Company.

Image courtesy of Alexander Stein

Virgil Abloh’s Air Force 1s Raise $24.5 Million For Charity

Two hundred pairs of Nike Air Force 1s designed by Virgil Abloh for Louis Vuitton’s spring/summer 2022 collection recently sold for a combined $23.5 million at a Sotheby’s auction. The proceeds go to Abloh’s Post-Modern Scholarship fund, which fosters equity and inclusion in the fashion industry by supporting the next generation of Black designers. The sale is the most valuable charitable sale at Sotheby’s in almost a decade, setting a new record auction total for fashion as well as a new participation record for the total number of bids received on opening day and number of bidders for online sales overall. “Today’s record-breaking auction, which saw unparalleled global participation, is a testament to Virgil Abloh’s legacy as one of the most visionary artists and designers of his generation whose widespread influence and impact is still palpable,” said Sotheby’s Chief Executive Officer Charles F Stewart. Read more about it at Bloomberg.

Image courtesy of Sotheby’s

Simple DNA Test Can Detect Common Neurological Conditions

A relatively simple DNA test—which involves whole genome sequencing—can diagnose common neurological disorders, providing people with clarity and ending uncertainty, a new study says. As Linda Geddes writes for The Guardian, “Historically, obtaining a definitive diagnosis for conditions including Huntingdon’s disease and some forms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis has been difficult, because, although the cause of the symptoms is genetic, knowing which test to carry out has resulted in delays of many years.” This type of whole genome sequencing has been used for various other reasons, but never before for “‘repeat expansion disorders” (which are relatively common, affecting one in 3,000 people) because those conditions can be “difficult to quantify.” Thankfully, the study—led by Queen Mary University of London, Illumina (a biotechnology company), University College London and Genomics England with NHS England—means that one simple test, rather than numerous, may provide answers for people struggling with a “diagnostic odyssey.” Read more at The Guardian.

Image courtesy of nobeastsofierce Science/Alamy

Scientists Reveal Our Vision Functions On a 15-Second Delay

New research done by scientists at the University of Aberdeen and the University of California, Berkeley reveals that human vision is up to 15 seconds behind real time, and we function on a “previously unknown visual illusion.” Essentially this delay could be the reason our vision doesn’t make us dizzy or nauseated. “Instead of analyzing every single visual snapshot, we perceive in a given moment an average of what we saw in the past 15 seconds,” the researchers write in The Conversation. “So, by pulling together objects to appear more similar to each other, our brain tricks us into perceiving a stable environment. Living ‘in the past’ can explain why we do not notice subtle changes that occur over time.” Read more about this fascinating find at Popular Mechanics.

Image courtesy of CSA Images

Link About It is our filtered look at the web, shared daily in Link and on social media, and rounded up every Saturday morning. Hero image courtesy of geralt/Pixabay

Cat-friendly products designed to keep your pet purrfectly happy

I wholeheartedly believe that this is a cat’s world, and we’re just living in it! If you have a cat or two, then you know that they are the true masters of our home, and we are their abiding slaves, tending to their every need, always at their beck and call. They’re the apple of our eyes, and we would do almost anything to keep them happy and comfy, including showering them with cat-friendly products designs! I’m always trying to create a comfortable and interactive living space for my own cats – from a cat couch with an interesting folding mechanism to a skylight-enabled litter box that doubles up as furniture, I’m ready to invest them in all. And this collection of cat products promises to be the investments that do exactly that! They will cater purrfectly to your cat’s every need! Happy kitties guaranteed!

1. Petsy

Ekaterina Vagurina used just cardboard to give rise to her cat house called Petsy to encourage cat owners to skip carpeted cat towers and opt instead for an affordable and simple cardboard house. Resembling the shape of an actual house, Petsy keeps a wide and lofty internal volume for cats to stretch and curl up to their heart’s content. Unadorned and unpainted, Petsy is a no-nonsense cat house that’s stripped down to its bare essentials—just the cardboard. In fact, if Petsy were to hit the markets, the entire house could be shipped as-is, no extra packaging necessary. Petsy comes with a large front door that only your cat will be small enough to slip into, as well as perforated holes on both ends of the house.

2. Cassle

Cassle, a multifunctional piece of furniture designed for cats by Soo Bin Cho, makes the most of your available floor and wall space to keep your cat happy and your apartment clutter-free. Cassle keeps two forms–the first is a pyramid-like structure that remains on the floor and the second is a wall piece that mounts onto any vertical surface. Cassle’s first form provides a type of hideout for cats. Defined by its triangular shape, Cassle’s first form finds the furniture piece’s cardboard beams connected by 3D-printed PLA joints to form a pyramid. Biodegradable, industrial wool felt coverings drape over the pyramid to conceal the interior, providing a dark space for cats to rest.

3. Cat Couch

Noticing the gap between cat-specific furniture and furniture designed for humans, Tomoya Ono conceptualized Cat Couch, a cat-friendly foldable couch designed for cohabitation. With the aim of designing a couch that is equally designed for humans as for cats, Ono found versatility through a foldable structure. Before designing Cat Couch, Ono figured removable cushion fabric and a modular design would provide the conditions needed for easy cleaning when necessary. Ono also designed Cat Couch with built-in scratch pads that provide a designated space for when the feline urge to scratch arises.

4. The Petlibro Granary Automatic Pet Dry Food Feeder

The Petlibro Granary Automatic Pet Dry Food Feeder keeps your kitty well-fed even when you’re not home! It comes in 2 volumes – a 3-liter and a 5-liter version, and can store up to 50 portions of dry food! You can schedule and set up feeding times, so the feeder automatically provides your pet with food, irrespective of whether you’re home or not. You can even set up a 10-second audio message for your pet, which the feeder will play when you’re at work, providing your furry friend with some comfort! The sleek pet gadget also features an easy-to-read and use LED screen. So you can change settings without any difficulty!

5. The Cat Amazing EPIC! Cat Toy Puzzle Feeder

The Cat Amazing EPIC! Cat Toy Puzzle Feeder is an indoor product that enables your cat to experience the thrill of hunting within your home! The intriguing toy comes with three levels, and seven sections. You can shift the difficulty level to suit the skills and engagement level of your kitty! It features a double-wall corrugated outer shell, so your furry friend can play with it, without damaging it. It even rewards your pet with treats! Created using plant-based materials and ink, the product is 100% biodegradable and recyclable. It’s completely safe for your kitties to play with.

6. Cat Person Litter Box

With Cat Person, Granneberg set out to design a litter box that appears like a piece of furniture to blend in with other interior design elements. To achieve this, Granneberg outfitted the Cat Person litter box with a wooden top lid that gives it the same appeal as a small side table. Ensuring casts enjoy enough airflow and light while taking care of business, Granneberg punctuated the wooden top lid with circular cutouts, creating a ventilated and well-lit interior space. Granneberg also designed the litter box with larger-than-average dimensions to allow bigger cats to have enough room to sit and turn around with comfort.

7. The Renault Pet Communication Device

This is visioned as an electric vehicle that allows pets and their owners to share a space beyond the confines of their homes. The designer believes, that Gen-Z’s race to individualism and high dependence on smart devices will alienate them further in the future when maybe their pet is the only companion. In that scenario, leisure time with the cat or dog would be a relieving experience. Thus, this EV design is created to ensure that the owner and the pet can move in and out of the vehicle with ease. It would have a large WZ-GO-style door on the rear that would enable the pet to access her space in the back of the vehicle.

8. Solar

Shaped like the sun, Solar is a small, but sturdy floating cat bed that’s built from pinewood. In a similar fashion to their other pieces of cat furniture, MyZoo lined Solar with a slotted resting platform for safe jumping. Ideal for small spaces, Solar provides a resting spot and jumping platform for your cat and saves space in the meantime. Unlike bulky cat towers and stringy scratching pads, Solar doesn’t take up any ground space and easily mounts to any wall where there’s room. Since cats love heights, MyZoo figured Solar was the best of both worlds–a space-saver for cat owners and an ideal resting spot for cats.

9. Ara

Ara, a three-tiered cat resting station designed by Juan Esteban Restrepo Tabares, combines a subtle sense of privacy with cushioned resting levels for cats to feel secluded while making use of their own furniture. Ara is defined by two sets of wraparound banisters that cradle three levels of cushioned resting areas. Walking through the center walkway, cats find the first resting level where they can make full use of its area. Then, accessible through a central cavity, cats can climb up to the second tier where they can perch high above the ground, to look out over their home space.

10. Habicats’ Cat House

This adorable cat house by Habicats is created from compostable materials, making it 100% recyclable. The eco-friendly house is large enough to accommodate kitties of all shapes and sizes. It’s a fun and cozy spot for your pet to play, nap, and relax in. It also comes with a scratcher pad, to perfectly meet your cat’s scratching needs! Every season, Habicats releases a refreshing and super cool design, so you can always upgrade your cat’s house for a better one!

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This compact home finds harmony with New Zealand’s landscape through off-grid features and a small footprint

The Thornton-Hasegawa House is a three-level residence in Wellington, New Zealand that has been future-proofed for off-grid use to find harmony with the surrounding landscape.

Bonnifait+Giesen Architects build homes that are designed to reconnect its residents with a “physical reality, a territory, its history, and a cultural context,” as the firm’s co-founders Cecile Bonnifait and William Giesen put it. As a result, their diverse portfolio of residential homes and commercial buildings exhibits a unique bond with the land that was there long before the buildings were given a foundation and walls. In Wellington, New Zealand, Bonnifait+Giesen Architects were asked to design a small home on a steep slope in Brooklyn, an old Wellington subdivision.

Designer: Bonnifait+Giesen Architects

Calling it the Thornton-Hasegawa House, Bonnifait+Giesen Architects were met with a few challenges when designing the home in accordance with the wild terrain of Brooklyn’s steep hills. To meet the clients’, Tomoko and Aaron’s, request for a small, compact home connected to its surrounding landscape, Bonnifait+Giesen Architects found adaptability in a small footprint and vertical layout. Split between three levels, the Thornton-Hasegawa House covers 50-square-meters and appears as a small tower perched above Brooklyn’s thicket.

Entering the home, residents are greeted with bright walls that are entirely clad in oriented strand board (OSB), which has been coated with a whitewash finish, immediately giving the home a spacious, airy feel. Bonnifait+Giesen Architects followed this spacious effect throughout the home by splitting the living areas between two levels. On the lower level, residents can enjoy the more social areas, like the living room, dining area, and kitchen. Then, taking the ​​yellow, Kowhai staircase to the home’s upper level, residents can find privacy and respite in the main bedroom and private bathroom.

The outside of the home finds a classic, nautical personality with single cedar-clad facades that converge with cool, inky blue metal elements that brace the home from natural elements. Maximizing the Thornton-Hasegawa House’s connection to the surrounding landscape, Bonnifait+Giesen Architects future-proofed the home for off-grid use. As no services were onsite during the home’s initial design processes, Bonnifait and Giesen oriented the home’s north-facing roof to maximize its potential solar gain, allowing the double-height interior to collect pools of natural sunlight. Then, designated locations outside of the home were left for water tanks and batteries.

Floor-to-ceiling windows unfold to connect interior living spaces with an expansive outdoor deck. 

Glazed bi-fold doors grant access to the deck that runs the full length of the living spaces. 

The cool, inky metal siding conceals the home in a sky blue to give it an elusive appeal.

OSB paneling brightens the home’s interior to maximize the sunlight collected through the large internal windows.

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Bang & Olufsen’s design language influences this sound bar concept to achieve a midcentury modern look

Using the design language of Bang & Olufsen, Andrey Dalakishvili conceptualized a midcentury modern soundbar that’s defined by a parametric wave that courses through its center.

When on the hunt for household appliances, it’s important that they match the rest of the home’s style. If you’re going for a more Scandinavian-inspired, minimalist look, then appliances that embrace simplicity and clean lines are the way to go.

Alternatively, if you tend towards more of an Art Deco look, then maximalist appliances painted with highly saturated colors would make more sense. Interpreting midcentury modern design through the design language of Bang & Olufsen, Andrey Dalakishvili, founder of Work People Agency, conceptualized a soundbar.

Midcentury modernism is hard to define because the movement finds its groove by merging together two opposing styles—touches of organic material are thrown together with synthetic elements, and the boundary between outdoor and indoor spaces is usually blurred.

Rendered in Grasshopper 3D, Dalakishvili remained close to midcentury modernism by combining a dynamic centerpiece with a clean, geometric basin. “During the development,” Dalakishvili explains, “the goal was to achieve a strict style, but not devoid of emotionality. A soundbar can fit perfectly into a laconic interior, and if necessary, become an extravagant art object.”

Defined by the visual scheme of parametric waves, Dalakishvili wanted to simulate the look of ripples on water caused by sound vibrations. Following this concept, the wave seems to start where the remote is located. Magnets and ribbed fasteners rise with the inclined base to form the crest of a wave and a snug fastener for the remote to rest when not in use. On the opposite end of the soundbar, a control panel and volume slide can be found where the ripples flatten.

Designer: Andrey Dalakishvili x Working People Agency

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LEGO Sonic The Hedgehog set comes with a highly detailed track and even the evil Dr. Eggman

Yet another collection born from the highly creative LEGO Ideas community, the Sonic The Hedgehog Green Hill Zone is a 1,125-piece set inspired by SEGA’s hit videogame (which also translated to the silver screen). Owing to Sonic’s flat, cartoonish, ‘sidescrolling endless runner’ game design, the LEGO set translates wonderfully into real life, with the overall diorama looking incredibly similar to the actual game! Named after the Green Hill Zone, the first and most iconic level in the Sonic The Hedgehog videogame, the LEGO kit comes completely detailed with a stretch of track that’s dotted with palm trees, coins, lever-activated spring jumps, and even a loop! There are even obstacles to jump over/through, including 7 rings, and 5 TVs with interchangeable sticker-based screens! Characters in the set include Crabmeat, Motobug, Dr. Eggman (with his spaceship), and obviously, our favorite sapphire-tinted speedster, Sonic!

Designer: toastergrl (LEGO Ideas Community Member)

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The LEGO Sonic The Hedgehog Green Hill Zone is perfect for any videogame buff. Its brilliantly detailed design feels almost like a screenshot from the real game, and you can even customize the track by shifting elements and characters around, or extend it by procuring another box-set! If you personally ask me, this one definitely calls for a short, cute stop-motion video!

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How To Join a Job Search Club

In the world of remote work, job search clubs can be crucial to not only landing a job, but can help also keep you from feeling isolated.

Remember in your younger school days when you used to join extracurricular clubs? You may have been a part of the chess club, drama club, or anime club.

These clubs may have transferred into a hobby as you grew up and got busy with other things like college, internships, or moving to new places.

However, in the world of remote work, some clubs can be crucial to not only landing a job—but can help keep you from feeling too isolated. That’s why job search clubs exist. Yes, you read that correctly. These are a bit different from associations; they are clubs for adults solely dedicated to being a support group for job-hunting, proving tools for one to land their next gig. The job search can feel lonely, especially if you’ve recently been laid off or fired. Luckily, job search clubs are easier to find and join because of the pandemic.

Want to know more?

Why Should I Join a Job Search Club?

Looking for the next career move isn’t always easy, and job clubs understand that. With the goal of helping people spend less time job-hunting, these clubs typically hold job-seekers accountable by making sure they’re on track with their job search. They meet regularly and create a support system for anyone feeling particularly isolated while trying to find a new job.

These clubs also can serve as networking opportunities, with info sessions and speakers who may have previously been in the club(s). Additionally, members of the club have the opportunity to take part in mock interviews, have their cover letters and resumes reviewed, and go through training for specific job skills.

How Do I Find a Job Search Club?

We recommend starting with the US Department of Labor‘s job service website, CareerOneStop. This site provides a tool for you to search for job clubs depending on your location.

You can also most likely find job clubs in your local community, at places like the public library, community college, or local universities—with job clubs usually listed on their website.

We also recommend looking for these types of clubs on social media, as they can come in the form of Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn groups.

Job hunting doesn’t have to be a lonely experience if you’re able to utilize a job club as a resource. And you never know, you may gain new friends and connections along the way.